Hidden Brain - Emma, Carrie, Vivian
Episode Date: February 19, 2019The eugenicists were utopians, convinced that they were doing hard but necessary things. And that included making decisions about who could have children. ...
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vidantam.
On June 4th, 1924, a girl was admitted to the Virginia State Colony for epileptics and feeble
minded. She was white, dark-haired, and 17 years old. She became colony in May 1692.
The medical superintendent of the colony examined her, he declared her healthy,
free of syphilis, able to read, write, and keep
herself tidy.
And then he classified her as feeble-minded of the lowest grade, moron class.
With that designation, this young woman, who had already lost more than many people
could bear in a lifetime, was set on a path she didn't choose.
What happened next laid the foundation for
one of the most tragic social experiments in American history, the forced sterilization
of tens of thousands of people. This story has resonance even today. It's about how science
and the law, tools that we have created to help improve our lives, can easily become instruments
of prejudice and oppression.
It's a story of hubris and about good intentions gone awry.
Eugenics and the science of better breeding this week on Hidden Brain.
First of all, please tell me your name. Carrie, Elizabeth, Gettimo.
In 1980, an NPR reporter Wendy Blair took a trip to a one-room shack outside Charlotte's
ville, Virginia.
She'd come to interview a 78-year-old woman.
Her married name was Dede Moore, but her given name was Carrie Buck.
You see, I was adapted for now as a little girl.
I was adapted by the dubs, it's here in Shellville.
This interview was one of the few that Carrie Buck ever gave.
By this point, she had little to say.
It was left to others to reconstruct her story.
One of those who took up the task was historian and lawyer Paul Lombardo. He is the author
of the book, Three Generations, No Embersils, Eugenics, The Supreme Court, and Buck V.
Bell. Paul says the story of Carrie Buck really begins in the 19th century. Francis Galton was a cousin of Charles Darwin who came up with a theory of evolution.
Francis Galton was interested in evolution, but he was more interested in what he saw as the applications of the science.
His passion really, his driving force was to measure things and try to calculate how the future was going to play out in human behavior.
I think the thing we know for the most now
are his coinage of the term eugenics, but also
his real foundation of what we think of as modern statistical theory.
When Galton introduced the idea of eugenics, what was his thinking? What was he aiming to do?
As I said, he was looking a great deal at patterns of behavior and trying to figure out why it was that genius, the ability to think productively, and other abilities, how these clustered in families. And so we see him very early in his career
suggesting that maybe there's a way of understanding
this clustering of ability, and for that matter, disability
in certain families, there must be something that is biological
about it, something that's inherent to the organism.
And he proposes that this thing is really something
you can think of as eugenics, which is a way of organizing people
that will encourage the people who are prosperous and who are healthy
and who are productive to marry other people of similar talents
and then pass on their abilities to children.
And at the same time, discourage people who are not successful and not productive,
perhaps are poor, perhaps unwell, and over time, the negative ones will fall out of the population.
To be fair, lots of people pair up with others who are similar in education and social class,
but Francis Galton, writing in the early 20th century, wanted the state to get involved.
I cannot doubt that our democracy will ultimately refuse consent to that liberty of propagating children,
which is now allowed to the undesirable classes, but the popular says yet to be taught
the true state of things. A democracy cannot endure unless it be composed of able citizens,
therefore it must in self-defense withstand the free introduction of degenerate stock.
These ideas coincided with a new movement in the United States. The progressive movement
was an effort by social reformers to address the problems caused
by industrialization.
Progressives believed that education, science, and social institutions could solve society's
greatest problems.
They launched anti-corruption efforts, a drive for women's suffrage.
They also started the colony movement,, institutions to care for and to
detain people whom they viewed as disabled or deranged. The primary motive was
compassion. People who ran institutions realized that with a growing population
they had more and more people who were in need of care. So the colony movement begins as a movement out into the country.
And then later starts to take on the new ideas of eugenics.
Those ideas saying that people who are unfit,
people who have mental or physical disabilities,
people who are to use the language of the time,
people minded, or morons, or
imbistles should be separated and segregated from the general population, not only
because they can't survive in the city, but also because that will keep them
from reproducing. In 1911, Virginia opened its first colony just outside the small
city of Lynchburg. Initially, the colony only took in people with epilepsy but soon new buildings went up to house people with
mental, physical, even moral defects. Women were often taken to colonies in the
early years of the colony movement because they appeared to be sexually
promiscuous or there were concerns that they were so unable to control themselves and so
weak of mind and disposition that they needed to be protected and that the rest of the
population needed to be protected from them.
I reached out to Virginia historian Lynn Reinville.
She says it's impossible to disentangle the Eugenics movement from the long history of men
trying to regulate the behavior and bodies of women.
This was an attack against women.
It's men making a plan of attack
to deal with an issue that they have defined
and targeting women.
Just the way the birth control discussion is today,
it's always assumed that it's the
woman's responsibility and then something goes wrong, it's a woman's fault, and that
if we have to control something, we've got to control women.
When the Virginia colony first opened, demand for admission was high.
At the time, people suffering from mental and physical disabilities were often shunted
after the poor house or to a local jail.
The colony seemed like a far more humane option.
Paul Lombarder says the superintendent of the colony,
Dr. Albert Pretty, took his mission seriously.
Dr. Pretty believed that it was his prerogative
as a physician, and especially a physician
paid by the state to take care of the social problems
that were generated by the individuals who came to the Virginia
colony.
And Dr. Pretty thought the best way to do that was first of all, by segregating them away
from society and away from each other.
They couldn't have children if they couldn't have sex.
But secondly and more radically, he was one of the early people to propose surgical sterilization.
The idea of forced sterilizations sounds shocking today.
It was also shocking to many people in the early 20th century.
Decenters fought eugenics on religious and legal grounds, but it also appealed to many
ordinary citizens.
The majority of people in the country, at least up until 1920, had grown up on farms.
And everybody thought they understood how generation worked.
The birds and the bees and the bulls and the cows and all the animals on the farm all reproduced
as did all the crops.
And people who lived on farms understood that you called the herd of the weaker members.
You got rid of the plant that was rotting in the field. You weeded your garden so as to get rid of
the kinds of organisms that would ruin the whole plot. Gradually, states began enacting
eugenics laws. In 1907, Indiana passed the country's first compulsory sterilization law.
It applied to institutionalized criminals, rapists, idiots, and imbosils.
Thirty-one states followed with their own laws.
Diseases that might qualify a person for sterilization include its syphilis, alcoholism, moral
or sexual perversion, and feeble mindedness.
Virginia was not one of the early states to pass a eugenics law.
Nonetheless, around 1915, Dr. Albert Pretty began to sterilize some of his patients.
He felt he had the authority based on a number of Virginia laws, which had fairly vague
language in them, giving the directive to physicians who worked in state institutions,
the power to do whatever was necessary for the medical health of a patient.
He sterilized quite a number of them over a dozen, and then he was suddenly met with a
lawsuit by a family of a man from the Eastern part of Virginia whose wife and two daughters had been
taken to the colony while he was out of town.
The man bringing the lawsuit was George Mallory.
George was working on a sawmill in a little town outside of Richmond and was gone from home
for several weeks at a time.
He had a fairly large family with several daughters and a wife.
And when he came back from work one weekend,
he saw that most of his family was gone.
Some of his children had been sent to foster care
and his wife and two of his daughters
had been taken to the Virginia colony.
It turns out that the social workers
and the police had been watching their home
and they made the allegation that the social workers and the police had been watching their home and they
made the allegation that the Mallory family was running a house of ill repute or a brothel.
And that's why they broke the family up while George was gone.
George went and found a local lawyer told him his story. And that lawyer brought a case against
Dr. Priti. Albert Priti was furious. Here he was, a man of science and reason, being
challenged by someone who was not his social or intellectual equal. He never quite got
over the fact that he'd been dragged into the court by this poor man, when he thought he
was doing the best thing, both for the state and for those women whom he sterilized. A
jury refused to award damages to George Mallory, but the trial judge only won the doctor to stop what he was doing.
Current Virginia law, the judge said, was not in the superintendent's favor.
Eugenics was still illegal in Virginia. Albert Priti's response, he decided to change
that. He began to campaign for a Virginia law that would explicitly allow for the sterilization of defective people. Among other things, he argued such a law could
save taxpayer money. Instead of confining people to the colony, sterilized people could
be sent back to communities. In 1924, his efforts paid off. Virginia passed a broad sterilization law. It gave eugenicists the green light.
But Albert pretty and others feared
that even this wasn't enough.
What if someone challenged the law,
tried to overturn it?
They wanted something watertight.
They wanted not just a law,
but a law that was sure to survive legal challenge.
So they came up with an unusual strategy.
They decided to find a test case that they were absolutely sure to win.
A case where, in effect, they would get to play both prosecution and defense.
How to find such a case?
Dr. Albert Pretty had just a person in mind.
Her name was Carrie Buck.
Stay with us.
Carrie Buck must have realized from the time she was just a child that she didn't have
much power or say about what happened to her.
She was born in 1906 to Emma Buck, a woman who fell on hard times. Someone who, from time to time, was homeless,
someone who was suspected of being a drug abuser.
When Carrie was about four, local authorities removed her
from Emma's care and placed her in a foster home.
The family that became her foster parents were the dobs.
And the dobs were also a very modest crew.
They took her in partially because she could provide services as a household worker,
and also because they got a bit of a supplement from the state for taking care of her.
Carrie lived with John and Alice Dobbs for more than a decade.
She attended school and school records show. She was good at her lessons.
But she left school after the sixth grade, She attended school and school records show. She was good at her lessons.
But she left school after the sixth grade, and she spent her time as a domestic servant there in the Dobbs family. At 16, Carrie became pregnant. Her account of what happened never wavered.
She says Alice Dobbs had left town to care for a sick relative. And at that point,
a young man named Clarence Garland appeared.
He was a nephew of Alice Dobbs.
Carrie said Clarence took advantage of me.
He promised me he would marry me.
He forced himself on me, and then he left.
It was a huge scandal.
Alice Dobbs knew that having an unmarried pregnant girl in the house
looked very bad.
It would jeopardize the family's chances of getting other foster placements.
So she said about finding a way to have Carrie removed.
And she asked the local social worker and the nurse and some doctors if they could have her committed
to the Virginia colony for the epileptic and the feeble minded,
because that's often where
girls like Carrie who were in trouble went. The moral overlay in the late 19th and early 20th century
having to do with sex is just impossible to escape. The people who set up the colonies who thought
that they could isolate people who were sexually promiscuous
or for that matter who were somehow sexually unorthodox in other ways.
They really focused on the necessity of getting those people out of society.
Carrie was allowed to remain in Charlottesville until she gave birth.
Alison John Dobbs agreed to take in the baby, a little girl named Vivian.
Carrie was taken to the colony.
Now this is the point in the story where the plot takes a very strange turn.
You see Carrie's mother was already living at the same colony,
Emma had been brought there a few years earlier.
The stage was set for the tragedy that was about to unfold.
Well, when Kerry arrived at the colony, Dr. Priti was quite excited because he
had the records of Kerry's analysis and an examination by a Red Cross nurse who
was living in Charlottesville and he he knew the records of Carrie's mother, Emma.
And so all of the cluster of problems that Emma exhibited fit into Dr.
Pritties' idea of the kinds of traits, the kind of negative traits that were hereditary,
a woman who was sexually promiscuous, who had problems with her own inhibitions,
who couldn't control her intake of things like alcohol and drugs,
and who didn't take care of her children.
He thought that these were characteristics that were likely to be passed down.
So when Carrie appeared as a new resident of the colony,
and he connected the two people,
it seemed to him that there might be good evidence here of a hereditary connection.
Albert pretty knew that two generations with genetic flaws presented a strong case for sterilization,
but three generations that would seal the deal.
The third generation was Carrie's daughter Vivian, whom he automatically assumed was feeble-minded. The eugenicists had their case.
They ignored facts that didn't fit, like Harry's normal school record.
Harry was given a rudimentary IQ test, which came back suspiciously low.
The mental age, they assigned to her, the number, I should say, the IQ number they assigned
to her was something in the 50s.
If 70 is the cutoff for someone we would call developmentally disabled, or they might
call them moron, she was 20 points below that.
For Albert Pretty, the path was obvious.
The first step under the new Virginia law was to petition the colony board for authorization
to sterilize Carrie.
He argued that she was incurable, had a mental age of a nine-year-old, and had given
birth to a child born out of wetlock who was, quote, mentally defective.
The board agreed that sterilizing Carrie was the right course.
The next step to building a watertight case for sterilization was to have the board's
decision challenged in the courts.
The idea was to mount a legal challenge against eugenics, where the eugenics could play
about attack and defense.
They would defeat the challenge and thus establish a legal precedent.
So Albert pretty recruited a friendly lawyer, a personal confidant, who would sue him on
Carrie's behalf.
The lawyer was himself a proponent of Eugenics.
He filed the appeal and Carrie's name, but never really represented her.
She was just a prop.
We really have no contemporaneous record of Carrie's thoughts.
We have a picture of her, taken the day before her trial, which tells us a little bit, it tells
us that she was a 17-year-old girl who seemed to be fairly uncomfortable and clearly in distress.
She'd had a baby taken from her only a few months earlier.
She was taken out of her home and sent away to a place she'd never been.
She was surrounded by doctors and lawyers and other people who were prodding her and questioning her.
So one would expect that a small town, Virginia girl,
without a whole lot of education, with no one to protect her,
would probably be afraid and distressed.
And that's what she looks like in that picture.
During the first trial at the Amherst County Courthouse,
the Buck family was excoriated.
Amher Buc was accused of living in the worst neighborhoods and functioning like a 12-year-old.
A welfare worker who'd never met Carrie testified that she didn't seem to be a bright girl.
Another social worker offered her assessment of Carrie's seven-month-old daughter Vivian.
She said,
There's a look about it that's not quite normal,
but just what it is I can tell.
Finally, Albert pretty testified that sterilizing women like Carrie might quote,
tame them down.
The trial took less than five hours.
The county court upheld the sterilization order.
But it wasn't enough for the eugenesis.
Carry box lawyer appealed the case.
While the case was still in the lower courts, Albert pretty died of Hodgkin's disease.
A new doctor, John Bell, took over a superintendent of the colony.
His name replaced his predecessor in the lawsuit. At every step,
courts upheld the decision to sterilize Kerry. Finally, in 1926, the US Supreme Court accepted
the case for review. This was a very important step because if the Supreme Court didn't endorse
sterilization, then it was still possible for someone to
challenge the lower court law, and so they ended up in 1926 filing papers in the
United States Supreme Court on behalf of Kerry, challenging the case and
allowing the Supreme Court to take a look at all the evidence that had been
gathered at the steps below.
On May 2, 1927, in an 8-1 decision, the Court ruled a carry-buck could be sterilized.
The opinion was written by Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
He described the buck's family with cascading problems, generation to generation, a series of people who've had illegitimate children,
a series of people who seem to be mentally compromised and morally degraded mother child,
and then grandchild, all somehow touched with mental defect. And Holmes wraps this all up into one package
and says, it's better for all the world if instead of waiting for a degenerate offspring
to die from starvation or for criminals to be executed for the crimes that we stopped
this line before it goes on, better that those people not be born at all. And he describes
the Buck family in his opinion, and draws a line under
it and says, here we have three people, three generations, a whole household full of defect, three
generations of imbussels are enough. Three generations of imbussels are enough. This phrase was to
become the rallying cry of the Eugenics movement. On October 19, 1927, Carrie Buck was taken from her room at the Virginia Colony and brought
to the infirmary.
Dr. John Bell was waiting for her.
Carrie received anesthesia and drugs to keep her from vomiting.
When reporter Wendy Blair interviewed Carrie in 1980, she asked her about that day, and whether her doctor had told her what was happening.
We only said that I wanted to leave, said that I would have to go through the operation,
but I didn't want the operation.
I kicked against it.
But it was useless.
Everyone, the state, the country, even the Supreme Court, said Carrie's opinion about what
happened to her own body mattered less than the opinions of doctors, politicians, and judges.
Dr. Bell, having prepared Carrie for surgery, makes an incision in her abdomen, which exposes
her fallopian tubes. He then cuts the tubes, ties them together, and soars her up.
It takes several days for her to recover
because this is after all major surgery.
When she's recovered, she realizes
that she's had the surgical operation that would make her sterile.
Carrie was 21 years old.
And you remember how you felt?
I didn't feel too good over it.
Were you very sad?
Yeah, I said it because I was very curious.
Carrie was released from the Virginia colony soon after her sterilization.
She married twice.
Her first marriage lasted 25 years until her sterilization. She married, twice. Her first marriage lasted 25 years until
her husband died. She was still married to her second husband and living in a nursing facility
when Paul Lombardo finally spoke with her in December 1982. She was quite near death.
It wasn't clear that she was going to die, but she did about three weeks later. She was very weak,
that she was going to die, but she did about three weeks later. She was very weak, and she wasn't very talkative. So, we really didn't talk about the details of her surgery.
We did talk about her recollection of the time, and she made it obvious to me that she felt
that she had been wronged, because the young man who had forced himself upon her, as she said, disappeared.
She was left alone.
No one protected her and no one defended her.
No one protected Carrie Bucks younger sister, either.
Her name was Doris.
She'd also been brought to the colony on grounds that, quote,
sooner or later, she will become the mother of illegitimate children.
She was 12. She was registered as inmate 1968.
Doris was sterilized about a year and a half later. Medical staff only told the child
that she needed to have her appendix removed. NPR's Wendy Blair tracked down Doris and her
husband Matthew Figgins for her report. Doris said that for decades she hadn't understood what had been done to her.
I just love killing and I want it.
Why?
We want to kill them so bad.
Doris and Matthew Figgins, who tried all their married life to have children, are both
in their 60s now living in the country in Western Virginia. They visited many doctors before one told them not very clearly
that Dara probably couldn't have a child.
Dr. Hansberry had found scar tissue that she wouldn't be able to have a child.
He didn't know.
He didn't say that she had been sterile or anything.
And today the figs still feel their disappointment.
I felt empty, that's all.
It wasn't until 1979 that Doris learned that she had been sterilized.
The person who told her the news was the director of the colony at the time.
His name was K. Ray Nelson.
I felt that she had a right to know.
And basically that was my motive.
She had a right to know.
What is your understanding now about why they did that to you back then in 1928?
I couldn't tell you.
I don't know why.
What did the sperm end on us?
What?
Guinea pigs.
And what a Vivian carries daughter. She'd been adopted by John and Alice Dobbs.
According to the Supreme Court,
she was the third generation of imbeciles
and the Buck family.
Vivian went to school.
She went to the first grade and did passively well.
She went to the second grade. That passively well. She went to the second grade.
That summer, she got the measles, apparently developed some kind of secondary infection, and died when she was only eight years old. So her story was pretty much buried for the better
part of 50 years until the larger story of Buck v. Spell became public.
Before she died, Vivian, the child who was deemed to be not quite normal, had been on the honor roll.
After the Supreme Court decision, the nation embraced forced sterilizations for decades.
The last of the country's eugenics laws were repealed only in the 1970s, by then, some
65,000 Americans had been sterilized.
The targets were almost always the least powerful.
Native American and African American women, immigrants, the physically and mentally ill,
and of course, the poor.
As Paul puts it, if you want to know who was going to get
sterilized during the reign of the eugenicists, you just had to look at the
social ladder and see who was at the bottom.
When we come back, we consider the painful legacy of the Virginia State
colony for epileptics and feeble minded, and how far we've really come.
People would come up to my parents and they would say what happened to her, they would say,
can she talk, they would say what's wrong with her? Stay with us.
The Virginia State colony was built on a vast track to farmland overlooking the James River.
It's a beautiful spot in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains.
It's the kind of country that imprints itself on a person, becomes part of who you are.
Molly McAlley Brown grew up just 15 miles from the Virginia colony.
I had a lovely childhood.
I have a wonderful family, wonderful parents, and I really loved that place. And I really like still, and I think I still benefit from being someone who really feels
like they're from someplace, who feels really profoundly attached to a part of the world.
I can tell if I'm driving, I can always tell the minute I hit that part of Virginia,
sort of, no matter if I can see a sign or not, the landscape starts to look familiar and my heartbeat settles down and I feel like, oh, this is what
the world is supposed to look like.
And that's a really nice artifact, I think, of having been raised in some place, of knowing
where I'm from.
The Virginia colony was part of the landscape of her childhood.
Molly says that when she and her mother would drive past it on their way to shop at Lynchburg,
she would press her nose to the window and stare at the red brick buildings.
They looked haunted.
I knew that it had this complicated history tangled up with Apple Acha and the Great Depression
and people with disabilities, and I knew that it was still a residential facility for
adults with really severe disabilities, but I didn't know much else beyond that.
In time, she learned about the institution's troubled history.
For Molly, the story of Carrie and Doris Buck came with a special kind of pain.
When she looked at her own body, when she thought of the way its strangers looked at her own body, when she thought of the way strangers looked at her, she knew deep down.
The colony was meant to house people just like her.
Molly has cerebral palsy.
I have impaired balance and I walk with a kind of crouched gate.
She often uses a wheelchair. Molly has lived all her life knowing what it's like to be viewed
as Albert Pretty might say, as unfit.
People would come up to my parents and they would say what happened to her, they would
say, can she talk, they would say what's wrong with her.
And I think mostly, mostly those questions didn't come out of any kind of malice, they
came out of discomfort and curiosity and a lack of understanding.
But I understood because of things like that.
From a very early age, I understood my body as something strange and other and defective
and that people were encountering it in that way and then assuming that I was other and defective and strange.
Defective and strange. Defective and strange.
Words so similar to those ones used to describe the residents of the colony.
Molly felt the connection, and once summer, when she was home on college break,
she decided to visit the colony grounds.
When I was there, I was just really struck by the place I drove to the cemetery, you know, which had gravestones
from the very early 1900s up to, you know, just a few years prior to tell me when I was
there. And I drove through the facility itself, which because it was built on an enormous
amount of land, still had standing on it, all of the buildings that were the original
colony buildings that had just been sort of abandoned and moved out of and then beside
them there were these newer functional buildings that were the current facility.
And that combination of this place which was both a functioning residential facility and
also a kind of ghost town
of everything that it had been was really evocative for me. And there's a little plaque kind of at
the entrance to the colony that talks a little bit about its history. And again standing in the
cemetery, I just remember thinking, oh, if I've been born in the same part of the world, even 60 years earlier, I might well
have been a prime candidate to be a colony patient, and that is a kind of amazing, that
was an amazing realization for me.
Slowly, the idea for a book emerged, a book of poems.
She called it the Virginia Colony for epileptics and feeble-minded.
Here's Molly reading the first poem in the collection,
inspired by those drives she took as a child.
Whatever it is, home or hospital, graveyard or asylum,
government facility or great tract of land
slowly seating itself back to dust,
its church is a low slung brick box with a single window,
a white piece of plywood labeled
chapel, and a locked door.
Whatever it is, my mother and I ride along its red roads in February with the windows
down.
This place looks lived in, that one has stiff gray curtains in the window, a roof caving
in.
We see a small group moving in the channel between one building and the next,
bowing in an absent wind. He's in a wheelchair, she is stumbling, pushing a pram from decades ago,
cold black and wrong. There is no way it holds a baby. Behind them, a few more shuffling bodies and coats.
a few more shuffling bodies and coats. I am my own kind of damaged there, looking out the right hand window.
Spastic, paulseed, and off-balance.
I'm taking crooked notes about this place.
It is the land where he is buried, the place she spent her whole life,
the room where they made it impossible for her to have children.
It is the colony where he did not learn to read, but
did paint every single slat of fence you see that shade of yellow. The place she didn't
want to leave when she finally could because she lived there 50 years and couldn't drive
a car or remember the outside or trust anyone to touch her gently. And by some accident of luck or grace some window less than half a
century wide it is my backyard but not what happened to my body. Most of the
poems in Molly's collection are written from the point of view of patience but
a few are written in the voices of colony staff. In a section of the book called
the infirmary Molly writes from the perspective of a colony
doctor.
A dictionary of hereditary defects.
It is shocking really how many ways a being can go wrong before they're even born into
the world.
Creanism.
You are caught between human and animal, heavy and flat faced.
You have hoofs for hands, a cow's wide tongue.
Epilepsy, you are destroying yourself from the inside out.
Feeble mindedness, I could shout into the cavern of your mouth and hear my own words echo
back off the high walls of your head over all the blank space of your brain. This is the
most useful noise that you will ever make. It easy. You cannot even reproduce my echo. You are
living yet already your body has started to decay. It knows you are not for this world. You go limp
or spastic, turn to stone or slime. At home I drown the smallest
kitten in the litter, hold its head under the water for a minute. I feel its heart stop
with my thumb. It's done. You are not for this world. It would be cruel to let you replicate
yourself and make another creature faded to crawl around
feeble and stunted yowling for absent milk.
I asked Molly why she wanted to feature the voices of Colony Staff.
It is easy from the present moment always to look back at what feel like the
kind of atrocities or injustices of our past and think, oh, okay,
the people who perpetrated that were monstrous. They were nothing like me. They were evil.
They were nothing like my family. They belonged to a world that is entirely unlike the world around us.
And to think, oh, we're at a comfortable, far removed distance from that time or from
doing something like that.
And I think one of the things I wanted to do by having poems in the voices of colony
stuff, of the doctors and religious leaders and nurses and attendants who worked in the
place, was to say, no, these people were in fact quite human.
We're motivated by fear.
We're motivated by misunderstanding.
We're motivated by anxiety, by visceral disgust,
by all kinds of things that we still feel.
And that in fact, this wasn't a sort of atrocity undertaken by monsters.
It was a campaign undertaken by deeply flawed human beings.
While campaigns of mass sterilization are in our past, the ideas that inspired those
campaigns live on.
Dozens of women were sterilized without their consent in the California prison system
between 2005 and 2011. In 2017, a judge
in Tennessee offered reduced jail time to inmates who agreed to be sterilized in order
to, quote, break a vicious cycle of repeat drug offenders with children.
The eugenicists were utopians, convinced that they were doing hard but necessary things.
As much as we might like to relegate their actions to the history books, it's important
to pay attention, to make sure we are not carrying their ideas with us in a new addition,
freshly bound, shining with the possibility of a brighter future.
Today's show was produced by Jenny Schmidt and Thomas Liu with fact-checking by Laura Quarelle.
It was edited by Tara Boyle.
Our team includes Raina Cohen and Pat Scha.
Kevin Beasley did our voiceovers of Francis Galton.
Our unsung hero this week is Wendy Blair, who was reporting 38 years ago, and sure that
Carrie Bach's voice was not erased from her own story.
Thank you, Wendy.
For more hidden brand, you can find us on Facebook and Twitter and listen for my stories on your
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I'm Shankar Vidantam, and this is NPR.